- Signatures: 3,134
- Goal: 10,000
- Deadline: Ongoing...
Exported worldwide, these toxic films are spreading tobacco addiction, disease and death to the largest generation in history. If current trends continue, tobacco will kill 450 million people around the world by 2050.
The single simplest, most effective anti-tobacco action you can take?
Young people, parents, community leaders and health professionals know that major U.S. studios could keep smoking out of future youth-rated movies (G, PG, PG-13) using their own voluntary rating system - no government intervention required. This policy solution is endorsed by the World Health Organization and leading U.S. health organizations.
So far, the film industry's trade association - the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) - has point-blank refused. Join thousands of people worldwide in signing this global petition. Tell Hollywood: The whole world is watching.
| Number | Date | Prefix | Name | Country | Why I'm signing |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3,138 | 10:47 am PST, Dec 26 | Mr. | Michael Tiedemann | United States | |
| 3,137 | 9:13 pm PST, Dec 21 | Mrs. | Anonymous | Australia | |
| 3,136 | 10:59 am PST, Dec 16 | Gabriel Miterick | Canada | ||
| 3,135 | 1:17 pm PST, Dec 12 | Mr. | Viktor Germogenov | United States | Smoking must be stopped to prevent the unlimited amount of health issues in young adults as well as the elder people. I'm signing this because I would truly like to contribute to such a great cause. If we won't do anything to stop the multi-billion smoking industry, nothing will. I want my friends, family members and especially my kids to be living in a smoke-free society; not what it is now. |
| 3,134 | 1:41 am PST, Dec 9 | Ms. | Breanna Foncannon | United States | cause smoking is harmful to teens and shouldn't be pushed on them in movies |
| 3,133 | 1:35 am PST, Dec 9 | Ms. | loren amaral | United States | im signing because i think its wrong how youth rated movies have smoking in it and how kids want to do it more from seeing their fave star smoking. |
| 3,132 | 3:40 pm PST, Dec 2 | Mrs. | Monica Shanklin | United States | |
| 3,131 | 9:10 am PST, Dec 1 | Linda Lang | United States | Smoking is a huge health risk and should not be promoted especially in movies aimed at children and youth. Shame on you. | |
| 3,130 | 2:23 pm PST, Nov 29 | Diane Malpass | United Kingdom | ||
| 3,129 | 12:47 pm PST, Nov 29 | Ms. | Anastasia To | United Kingdom | |
| 3,128 | 2:58 pm PST, Nov 24 | Ms. | Anonymous | United States | |
| 3,127 | 4:45 am PST, Nov 24 | Mrs. | Maria Siakalli | Cyprus | |
| 3,126 | 1:39 am PST, Nov 24 | Sophia Jooss | Ecuador | Because I find very disgusting all the strategies that greedy tobacco companies use, to keep addicted, loyal, long-term customers in their side | |
| 3,125 | 9:29 pm PST, Nov 23 | Mr. | Angelo Feldkamp | United States | |
| 3,124 | 9:18 pm PST, Nov 22 | Ms. | Anonymous | Greece | |
| 3,123 | 4:26 pm PST, Nov 22 | Dr. | Anna Stone | United States | |
| 3,122 | 1:49 pm PST, Nov 22 | Ms. | Sarah H | United States | |
| 3,121 | 11:45 am PST, Nov 22 | Ms. | Selva Baker | Costa Rica | smoking is not cool, it is not right to convey a positive message about smoking to children who are easily pulled into addictive habits just because they want to "fit in" or be "cool". it is so much cooler to be healthy and smart, cigarettes have no place in a healthy and smart life!! |
| 3,120 | 5:28 am PST, Nov 22 | Mrs. | Liz Mcgrath | United States | |
| 3,119 | 5:16 am PST, Nov 22 | Mr. | Brian Mitchell | United States | |
| 3,118 | 6:01 pm PST, Nov 21 | Danielle Robb | Australia | ||
| 3,117 | 8:09 am PST, Nov 21 | Joyce Anne Meador | United States | ||
| 3,116 | 4:52 am PST, Nov 21 | Daniel Scheuch | Australia | Everytime I see a someone smoking in a movie I feel ill. I say keep them out of all movies! The 16 year old girl was smoking in Dr Pananas Imaginearium, that was totally wrong! | |
| 3,115 | 4:50 am PST, Nov 21 | Mr. | Oli Jooss | South Africa | |
| 3,114 | 12:58 am PST, Nov 21 | Dr. | Michael Nightingale | United Kingdom | It's difficult to imagine a more contr natural practice. It is damaging, demeaning and disgusting. It certainly ought to be illegal and at the least confined to private locations where there are no children. |
| 3,113 | 9:19 am PST, Nov 20 | Mrs. | Silvia Hall | United States | |
| 3,112 | 6:56 am PST, Nov 20 | Mr. | Edward Carey | United States | |
| 3,111 | 1:11 am PST, Nov 20 | Diane Cooper | United Kingdom | Smoking is a disgusting habit which should be discouraged at all costs. It destroys people's health and the environment. | |
| 3,110 | 9:00 pm PST, Nov 19 | Ms. | Sue Seery | United States | |
| 3,109 | 8:19 pm PST, Nov 19 | Mr. | jean rinaldo | United States | One of my kids started smoking around age 14/15.... He is over 50 and still smokes.... |
| 3,108 | 4:06 pm PST, Nov 19 | Lisa Macdonald | United States | ||
| 3,107 | 3:05 pm PST, Nov 19 | Dr. | Howard Feder | United States | It is difficult for me to understand why young people take up smoking when they know it will damage their lungs and lead to an early death. It just seems insane to me to see all people that smoke inhaling something they must know will cause lung problems and a painful death. |
| 3,106 | 2:42 pm PST, Nov 19 | Kathryn Schubert | United States | Monkey see, monkey do. Same with people. | |
| 3,105 | 1:27 pm PST, Nov 19 | Derek Spragg | Canada | I finally quit after 20+ years including a 3 year no-smoking period. I'm now 73 and still play ice hockey which I wouldn't be doing if I hadn't stopped over 35 years ago. Kindest thing I ever did to myself. | |
| 3,104 | 1:18 pm PST, Nov 19 | Ms. | Mary T. Ferraro | United States | |
| 3,103 | 12:57 pm PST, Nov 19 | Ms. | Susan Nierenberg | United States | to try to prevent teens from starting to smoke, thereby making their lives longer and healthier |
| 3,102 | 12:25 pm PST, Nov 19 | Karin Ralph | United States | ||
| 3,101 | 11:10 am PST, Nov 19 | Mrs. | L Goldner | United States | I'm disheartened and disgusted seeing smoking glamorized in movies. |
Keep smoking out of youth-rated movies!
Eighty percent of U.S. movies released in the past five years have included smoking. The World Health Organization and U.S. health authorities agree that exposure to smoking in movies influences adolescents powerfully. Recent large-scale research studies indicate that this exposure recruits more than half of all new young smokers in the United States � 390,000 adolescents annually � of whom about one-third will eventually die from tobacco-related disease.
On a global scale, Hollywood's contribution to tobacco addiction threatens a death toll surpassing other major causes combined. Tobacco is the #2 killer worldwide. Both the U.S. film industry and the U.S. tobacco industry are aggressively expanding into the emerging markets of Asia, Africa, Latin America and Eastern Europe. Global tobacco deaths, now five million each year, will double in two decades, with most of the disability and mortality in poorer nations. Between now and 2050, total deaths from tobacco-related cancer and from cardiovascular and lung diseases will reach 450 million.
The U.S. film industry has a documented history of taking money to display tobacco products and smoking. Paid tobacco product placement is now prohibited by legal agreement between the major tobacco companies and top law enforcement officials, yet highly-advertised U.S. cigarette brands still appear in movies worldwide; smoking in U.S. films has returned to the level of 1950; and the balance of smoking incidents continues to shift from R-rated (over 17) to PG-13 (youth-rated) motion pictures.
A reasonable solution, respecting freedom of expression, is available. Updating its own rating system, administered by the Motion Picture Association of America, the U.S. film industry could easily keep smoking out of future movies marketed to adolescents, cutting their exposure � and consequent injury � by at least half. Violence, strong language and sexual content are already voluntarily calibrated to achieve a coveted PG-13 rating. The toxic effect of smoking on screen should be treated at least as seriously as offensive language.
The U.S. film industry knows that smoking on screen kills in real life. It is incumbent upon the studios and the media conglomerates that own them to take meaningful action as swiftly as possible. I join young people, parents, community leaders and health professionals around the world petitioning Motion Picture Association of America members to adopt a smokefree policy for youth-rated films. The largest generation of young people in world history deserves no less.
Note: This Keep smoking out of youth-rated movies! petition was submitted by Smokefree Movies Action Network. ThePetitionSite.com is a free service provided to help concerned citizens rally support for issues they believe in. The opinions expressed by this petition do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of ThePetitionSite.com or Care2.com. There is no express or implied endorsement of this petition nor any newsletter offers (except those from Care2.com) by Care2.com, Inc, ThePetitionSite.com, or our sponsors. If you believe this system is being abused, please contact customer support.
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